New Cancer Drug Gets Dramatic Results

New Cancer Drug Gets Dramatic Results

Shrinking tumors: A PET scan of one melanoma patient shows a significant decrease in the size and number of tumors (shown in black) 15 days after treatment with an experimental drug.

An experimental drug designed to block the effects of a genetic mutation often found in patients with malignant melanoma, a deadly cancer with few existing treatments, significantly shrank tumors in about 80 percent of those who carried the mutation. The findings, published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, signal a major success for so-called targeted cancer therapies, which are designed to block the effects of genetic mutations that drive the growth of cancer cells.

“This study is a major breakthrough in cancer treatment, and for metastatic melanoma,” says Matthew Meyerson, an oncologist and researcher at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Meyerson was not involved in the study. “It’s a spectacular example of how genome-targeted therapies are beginning to help cancer patients.” The drug in the current study inhibits activity of a protein called BRAF, which is overactive in 50 to 60 percent of malignant melanomas.

Advances in genetic technologies over the last decade have allowed scientists to study the genetic mutations that underlie cancer in much greater detail. The result has been a new approach to drug design. Unlike chemotherapy, which can affect both healthy and cancerous cells and often triggers serious side effects, genetically targeted drugs act selectively on cancer cells that carry the mutation.

Only a handful of such drugs have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and most target rare mutations. The BRAF mutation, in comparison, is common. Discovered in 2002, the mutation disrupts regulation of the BRAF protein, making it continually active. The drug in the current study is under development by pharmaceutical giant Roche and Plexxikon, a startup based in Berkeley, CA. The drug is just one of a number of BRAF inhibitors currently in clinical tests.

Melanoma can be effectively treated with surgery in the early stages, but the prognosis is grim once the cancer has spread beyond the skin. The two currently available drugs work in only about 10 to 20 percent of patients. According to the new findings, 37 of 48 patients with the mutation responded to the new experimental drug, with their tumors shrinking by more than 30 percent. Tumors completely disappeared in three of those patients. About 30 percent of patients who took the drug the longest developed a specific type of squamous cell carcinoma, a tumor that usually doesn’t spread and typically resolves on its own.

Further studies are needed before the drug can be approved by the FDA. But because scientists can use genetic testing to select the patients for whom the drug is most likely to be effective, they require much smaller trials to show the drug works. Keith Flaherty, an oncologist at Massachusetts General Hospital who led the research, says the project reflects a new streamlined approach to clinical testing of cancer drugs that’s quicker and less expensive than traditional methods.